Episode 53
Microsoft, IBM and Eugenics
Last week we mentioned a little easter egg regarding Bill Gates’ rise to power and wealth through Microsoft, but how did the events lead to Microsoft being such a large corporation and what ties does it actually have to various parties that eventually all share a common interest. We start the back tracking process with Bill Gates the creator of Microsoft. Let’s have a look now at Bill Gates’ mother, Mary Maxwell. She was the first female president of United Way, the largest non profit organisation heading 1800 charities. She also comes from a family of bankers, so let’s just say she’s well connected.
A close client she had during this time was John Opel, former CEO of IBM. It was Opel who met with Bill Gates, CEO of the then-small software firm Microsoft, to discuss the possibility of using Microsoft PC-DOS OS for IBM‘s about-to-be-released PC. At the time IBM was dealing with its own antitrust lawsuit with the U.S. Justice Department, so by doing this ‘business venture’, IBM was also able to resolve the ongoing lawsuit, which allowed the company to grow more rapidly.”
Microsoft created by IBM to avoid anti-trust laws. Gates likely just a frontman
So how does a college dropout sell IBM a product (MS-DOS) that he did not even own at the time (after the deal, they allegedly bought a 86-DOS from Seattle Computer Parts for $50,000 to sell as their own)! Is Bill Gates just a front man, as Microsoft was created as an IBM front company, to get around antitrust laws (operating as an external company, under IBM, getting around any antitrust lawsuits that IBM would have eventually faced, if they had themselves decided to corner the PC operating system market)?
Time to backtrack again; John Opel was the executive assistant to Thomas Watson Jr, the former CEO of IBM. He became in charge of IBM after his father Thomas Watson ‘OG’ passed away. Now Thomas Watson was the man that made IBM into, at the time, one of the biggest companies at the time. But in order to get to this stage there needs to be some business going on with interesting parties. By interesting parties we are talking about the Nazis. As mentioned in previous episodes, WW2 has plenty of ties with associated globalists such as funding from the Rothschild, Rockefeller and Busche*** families and even activity from George Soros and Pope Red Shoes the 16th, and after the war most Nazis went to the USA and formed NASA, but what does this have to do with IBM?
Thomas Watson ‘OG’ was head of IBM during this era and they were the company that made the punch cards for the Nazi death camp possible. When Adolf Hitler came to power, many saw a menace to humanity, but IBM treated Nazi Germany as a lucrative trading partner. Quickly, its president, Thomas J. Watson, engineered a strategic business alliance between IBM and the Third Reich, beginning in the first days of the Hitler regime and continuing right through World War II.
This alliance instantly catapulted Nazi Germany into being IBM’s most important customer outside the United States. As part of that strategic alliance, IBM and the Nazis jointly designed, and IBM exclusively produced, technologic solutions that enabled Hitler to accelerate and automate key aspects of his persecution of the Jews from the initial identification and social expulsion, to the confiscation and ghettoization, to the deportation and ultimate extermination.